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Non-Cattle Specific Topics
Gardening
Mid June, tomato flowers don't set fruit
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<blockquote data-quote="TexasJerseyMilker" data-source="post: 1808117" data-attributes="member: 42782"><p>Its the middle of June and no little green tomatos. The plants are big and healthy in their tomato towers They were planted in soil with compost and a little lime mixed in, watered and fertilized properly, they have no blights or diseases They are covered with yellow flowers that don't drop, they remain big and bright for ornamental purposes only.</p><p></p><p>In Texas for years I got lots of tomatoes by now (Early Girl, Better Boy). For the last 3 years in Oregon I had some tomatos by now (Better Boy, Early Girl, Sweet 100s). Lack of pollinators? They are self pollinating. I even went out and touched each flower with an electric toothbrush to shake down the pollen with no results.</p><p></p><p>I have Tomato strains bred for Oregon. Oregon Spring, Siltz, Legend, Soldaki (from Poland). Some early 'hairlooms' Cherokee Purple, Lemon Boy, Great White even good ole Early Girl. Coverd with flowers, no tomatos. Nothing. It must be something I can't do anything about-</p><p></p><p>"The first sign that it is the proper planting time for tomatoes is when the night time temperature stays consistently above 50 F./10 C. Tomato plants will not set fruit until the night time temperature reaches 55 F., so planting tomato plants when the night time temperature is at 50 F. will give them enough time to mature a bit before fruiting."</p><p></p><p> Well, it is the low 50s and even in the 40s at night here.</p><p></p><p>Dadgumed global warming.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="TexasJerseyMilker, post: 1808117, member: 42782"] Its the middle of June and no little green tomatos. The plants are big and healthy in their tomato towers They were planted in soil with compost and a little lime mixed in, watered and fertilized properly, they have no blights or diseases They are covered with yellow flowers that don't drop, they remain big and bright for ornamental purposes only. In Texas for years I got lots of tomatoes by now (Early Girl, Better Boy). For the last 3 years in Oregon I had some tomatos by now (Better Boy, Early Girl, Sweet 100s). Lack of pollinators? They are self pollinating. I even went out and touched each flower with an electric toothbrush to shake down the pollen with no results. I have Tomato strains bred for Oregon. Oregon Spring, Siltz, Legend, Soldaki (from Poland). Some early 'hairlooms' Cherokee Purple, Lemon Boy, Great White even good ole Early Girl. Coverd with flowers, no tomatos. Nothing. It must be something I can't do anything about- "The first sign that it is the proper planting time for tomatoes is when the night time temperature stays consistently above 50 F./10 C. Tomato plants will not set fruit until the night time temperature reaches 55 F., so planting tomato plants when the night time temperature is at 50 F. will give them enough time to mature a bit before fruiting." Well, it is the low 50s and even in the 40s at night here. Dadgumed global warming. [/QUOTE]
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Mid June, tomato flowers don't set fruit
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